12 reasons why Keegan Bradley is the best choice for United States Ryder Cup captain

12 reasons why Keegan Bradley is the best choice for United States Ryder Cup captain

Its apparently now the law that some out-of-the-blue thunderbolt has to rock the golf world every six months or so. At least this time around, the news has nothing to do with fractures, division or defection. This week brought the legitimately shocking news that Keegan Bradley will captain the 2025 Ryder Cup team this, just months after Bradley was passed over for the 2023 team and had his heart ripped out of his chest in HD on Netflixs Full Swing documentary.

“The dream of being a Ryder Cup captain is something that a lot of us don’t even think about because it’s such a prestigious honor,” Bradley said at his introductory press conference Tuesday. “I never knew if I’d get this opportunity. I always felt like this is something that I would love to do and be able to handle. I’m so honored to be able to be the leader of this team. And I’m going to Bethpage to win the Ryder Cup back for America.”

Bradley is a bold choice for captain, some would say a foolish choice but here are 12 reasons why this is the right choice. (Why 12 and not the typical golf-list 18? Read on.)

1. Sometimes the Golf Gods even the scales. Bradley didnt quite perform well enough to earn an automatic slot on the 2023 team, and that meant his fate was in then-captain Zach Johnsons hands. That turned out to be bad news indeed for Bradley, since Johnson opted to go with frequent housemates Rickie Fowler, Jordan Spieth and Justin Thomas. On the Ryder Cup points list, Bradley ranked higher than three of the captains picks, but was left at home. (To be fair, Cam Young ranked higher than four and also wasnt selected.) Bradley has spent most of his pro career focused on the Ryder Cup, and thus, watching him receive Johnsons awkward no-go call on Full Swing was absolutely gutting.

“That moment was real. I was crushed,” Bradley said. “It took us a while to get over that. Our whole family, we were devastated. But I’m American. I root for the Americans to win the Ryder Cup. I watch whether I’m playing or whether I’m not. I know all the guys on the team and I bleed red, white, and blue. I was thrilled to be able to watch these guys, and I was pulling for them.”

2. Bradley might be the most passionate player on the American side. While Europe treats the Ryder Cup as a sacred challenge, American players tend to view it as another stop on the calendar. Win, lose, oh well, theres another tournament to be played. Granted, thats an oversimplification, but the Americans give the vibe of a band of lone wolves, while the Europeans always feel like a team. Bradleys passion for the Cup is flat-out European, and if hes able to project that enthusiasm onto his team, good results will follow.

“You hear so much about the Ryder Cup, and then when you experience it, it’s so much more,” Bradley said. “I just loved every second of it. I loved being in the team room. I loved riding to the course with the guys. I loved winning our matches and going out and cheering. I loved every second of it.”

3. Theres that famous suitcase. Bradley doesnt have the experience of most Ryder Cup captains hes only played in two, and he has a career 4-3 record but hes already checked the obsessive box. After the United States 2012 collapse at Medinah, a despondent Bradley returned home and just collapsed, to the point that he didnt even open his suitcase from that day. Its sat unopened for 12 years, a time capsule of a moment and a testament to his singular focus. We can only hope, for Bradleys sake, that he didnt leave any dirty clothes in there. Still, its a sign that Bradley is either absurdly devoted to Ryder Cup success or a little bit off-center, both of which are good qualities in a U.S. captain.

“The 2012 Ryder Cup is such a strange feeling to me because for every day but the last day, my fondest memories are on a golf course,” Bradley said. “Sunday was the worst day on the golf course and one of the worst days of my life. I got home and I kept staring at the suitcase and I couldn’t open it because it was so, it was just, I was so sad. The stuff inside the suitcase was just gonna make it worse. So I put it off, I put it off, and then I kept looking at it and it was just, the memories inside there were so extreme on both sides that I decided, I’m gonna wait, I’m not gonna open this up until I’ve won a Ryder Cup.”

4. The home-field advantage. Look, lets be honest the home-field advantage at the Ryder Cup is so substantial that anyone from Judge Smails to Happy Gilmore to Lee Carvallo could lead the U.S. to victory. The home squad has won 11 of the last 13 Cups, with an average winning margin of five points. If Bradley cant win with the combination of the inherent talent on the U.S. side and the home-court boost, well, the United States has much bigger problems than just the captain.

5. Bradley knows Bethpage. Bradley attended college at St. Johns in Queens, only about 30 miles or so from Bethpage Black, the 2025 Ryder Cup host course. While at St. Johns, he and teammates would sneak onto the course and play holes thanks to a superintendent who would look the other way. That may or may not help him strategize a way through the three-day Ryder Cup, but at least hell be on familiar turf, a place where hes already accustomed to taking risks. Plus, even though hes a Boston guy, New York fans will embrace him as one of their own against those damned Europeans.

6. Phil Mickelson wasnt available. Theres a line of succession in Ryder Cups that proceeds through a well-defined set of players from every generation. Johnson, Davis Love III, Steve Stricker and Jim Furyk came from golfs Generation X contingent; Stewart Cink was rumored to be in the mix for the job right up until Bradley got it. Mickelson, who loves the Ryder Cup, was the consensus guess for the 2025 captaincy right up until the moment he decided to bail on the PGA Tour and burn every bridge in sight by jumping to LIV Golf. Bradley and Mickelson have a history of successful Ryder Cup team-ups; could Bradley bring in Lefty as a vice-captain? Perhaps.

7. Bradley is just 38. Ryder Cup captains tend to be players at the far edge of their competitive careers, in sight of the age-50 Champions Tour if not already on it. Bradley, by contrast, is just 38, making him one of the youngest captains in the events history. (European captain Luke Donald was 45 at last years event.) Bradley is the first of his generation to get the job, and the first to truly come of age in a post-Tiger golf world. One day, Spieth and Thomas will almost surely be captains, but for now, Bradley is the one who will be tasked with communicating the gravitas of the Ryder Cup to the millennial generation of players.

8. Bradley isnt one of the Cool Kids. After the Gleneagles debacle in 2014, when an out-of-touch Tom Watson sparked a mutiny led by Mickelson, a new Ryder Cup Task Force sought to establish criteria for creating a winning tradition. The plan was to create a seamless European-style transition between captains, rather than the start-from-scratch-every-two-years routine that had been the norm. The Task Force mutated into a cool kids table that culminated in last years buddy trip. Bradley is, by his own admission, an outsider in the insular world at the top of golf right now, and that could work in his favor. You dont win Ryder Cups with attitude and arrogance.

9. Tiger Woods wasnt available. Once Mickelson ejected from a potential captaincy, all eyes turned to Tiger Woods. He doesnt have a stellar Ryder Cup record, but he has the respect of every player on the planet. Hes close to many of the next generation of players in a way that Watson, for instance, wasnt. But Woods is also deeply involved in the merger/investment snarl between the PGA Tour and Saudi Arabias Public Investment Fund. Plus, the public demands of a captaincy are substantial; its possible Woods simply didnt want to devote that much time to the endeavor. Regardless, he reportedly took himself out of the running for the slot, opening a pathway for Bradley.

10. Bradley represents a break with the past. If theres anything weve learned over the last two years in golf well, besides the fact that everybody is greedy as hell its that the old ways arent necessarily the best ways. Tradition only works when it doesnt handcuff you to history. The old way of doing business at the Ryder Cup simply wasnt working for the United States; the team didnt learn from its victories, and didnt work to contain its defeats. Bradley may or may not be any better, but at least hell bring a different perspective, and sometimes thats enough to at least start down the path of a different course.

11. Bradley might be a playing captain. Once upon a time, the Ryder Cup featured playing captains, just like baseball had player-managers. No captain from either side has played in the event since Arnold Palmer in 1963, but that doesnt mean it cant be done. Bradley is still in the heart of his career, ranked 19th in the world. Suppose he qualifies his way in? Even better from a storyline perspective, suppose hes good enough to be one of the captains picks? Bradley picking himself over Thomas or Fowler would nail the turnaround narrative. In all likelihood, given the intense responsibilities of an impending captain, this will be a moot question, since Bradleys game wont be as sharp as it could be. But its a fun what-if.

12. Why 12? Easy. At Marco Simone in Rome last fall, the United States thoroughly embarrassed itself. Players allegedly asking to be paid, players pursuing their own agendas, players looking like they were headed for a roadside colonoscopy everything about the American team in Rome looked unprepared and overmatched. In that Ryder Cup, the U.S. only managed 11 ½ points. So anything better than that counts as a success.

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